Following the success of
assault guns on the World War II
Eastern Front, the
Hungarians developed their own model, based on the chassis of the
Turán tank. There were two designs, the 44M
Zrínyi I, incorporated a long 43M 75 mm gun, but it did not pass the prototype stage. The 40/43M
Zrínyi II was armed with a 40M 105 mm L/20 howitzer.
The Zrínyi II design was a traditional infantry support vehicle. The Zrínyi I was hoped to fulfill an anti-tank role.
Between 40 and 66 Zrínyi II units were produced between August 1943 and July 1944 and a single Zrínyi I prototype. There is only one surviving Zrínyi II in the Kubinka tank museum near Moscow.
Zrínyi II in Romanian service near
Cluj (Kolozsvár in
Hungarian) in late 1944.A serviceable Zrínyi II was captured by the Romanian troops in Transylvania during September–October 1944, being pressed into service for a limited period.
[1] The assault gun was later confiscated by the Red Army.